My Inner-Thigh Muscles Hurt and I Can Barely Walk After Exercising

If you've ever finished a difficult workout, you've likely had some postexercise pain. But inner-thigh pain that significantly affects your ability to walk could be a sign of a serious muscle injury.
It's important to understand the difference between "normal" exercise soreness and actual muscle injury, such as a strain or tear.
Anatomy and Inner-Thigh Pain
Your inner-thigh muscles don't get as much attention as your glutes, quads, and hamstrings do. However, these muscles, collectively called the adductors, are important muscles. As a group, the adductors move your thigh inward. Individual adductor muscles also assist with hip flexion, or forward movement of the thigh, and extension, or backward movement of the thigh.
Groin injuries most commonly affect athletes who participate in martial arts, softball, baseball, football, soccer, hockey, basketball, tennis, figure skating, and horseback riding.
Assess the Severity
- Grade 1 Stretching or mild tearing of a few muscle fibers. Pain and tenderness are present, but normal strength is maintained.
- Grade 2 Greater number of injured muscle fibers. Pain and tenderness are more severe; might have bruising and a noticeable loss of strength. Inner-thigh swelling after a workout could indicate you have an injury in this category.
- Grade 3 Full tear through the muscle; might hear an audible "pop" when the injury occurs. Complete loss of function, considerable pain, swelling, tenderness, bruising, and noticeable deformity. This level of injury requires urgent medical attention and probable surgical intervention.
Grade 1 or 2 inner-thigh muscle strains can likely be treated at home using the RICE method:
- Rest Avoid any activities that increase your pain, but don't just lie around. You might need to use crutches for a few days to reduce pressure through your injured leg.
- Ice Apply ice to the injured area for 15 to 20 minutes every few hours for the first three days after injury. Remember that ice should not be in direct contact with skin — use a barrier such as a towel between the ice and skin. If your pain extends through the whole length of your thigh, an ice bath might be more effective.
- Compression Wrap your thigh with an elastic bandage to help reduce swelling. Begin just above your knee, overlapping each layer by 50 percent. Wrap as far up into your groin as you comfortably can. Don't wrap too tightly — you should be able to fit at least two finger-widths between your skin and the bandage. If you have numbness or tingling in your leg, or if your toes become dusky-colored, the bandage is too tight.
- Elevation Prop your leg up above the level of your heart as much as possible. This will allow gravity to help move swelling out of the injured area.
If you have symptoms of a grade 3 sprain, or truly cannot bear weight on your affected leg, seek immediate medical attention. Do not try to treat this injury at home.
Understand 'Normal' Muscle Soreness
It's not unusual to have some muscle soreness following a workout. And you might not notice this discomfort right away. You may finish your routine feeling good, but the day after your workout you might wake up feeling like you've been hit by a truck. The muscles of your inner thighs might feel like tight rubber bands and cause you difficulty when walking.
Adductor muscle soreness can also develop from normal microtearing that occurs during strength-training exercises. This muscle damage is what precipitates muscle growth. Examples of exercises that can lead to adductor soreness include side lunges, use of a lever adduction machine, wide-stance sumo squats, and dead lifts.
Perform Gentle Stretches
Wait at least 48 hours after injury before you begin gentle stretching and strengthening exercises, and only perform them in a pain-free range of motion.
Move 1: Figure 4 Stretch
- Sit at the edge of a firm chair.
- Cross your injured leg over the opposite thigh, resting the outside of your ankle just above the opposite knee.
- Gently press down on the bent knee until you feel a stretch along the inside of your thigh.
- Repeat this stretch on the other side.
Intensify this stretch by hinging forward at your hips, lowering your chest toward your thighs.
Move 2: Butterfly Stretch
- Sit on the ground.
- Bend your knees and bring the soles of your feet together.
- Place your hands on your ankles and rest your elbows on your knees.
- Slowly bend forward and gently press down on your knees with your elbows.
- Stop and hold when you feel a strong stretch.
Move 3: Side-Lunge Stretch
- Stand up straight with your legs spread wider than shoulder-width apart.
- Raise your arms up and out to your sides.
- Turn your foot out to the side on your unaffected leg.
- Keeping your injured leg straight, bend the opposite knee and shift your weight over that knee until you feel a stretch along your injured thigh.
- Repeat this stretch on the other side.
Move 4: Runner's Stretch
- From a standing position, step your injured leg back approximately two feet and turn your foot outward.
- Bend your front knee and lean your chest forward until it rests on your thigh.
- Shift your weight over the front leg until you feel a stretch in your injured thigh.
- Repeat this stretch on the other side.
Move 5: Double Leg Straddle
- Sit on the ground with your legs extended.
- Spread your legs apart as far as you comfortably can.
- Keeping your toes pointed toward the ceiling, hinge forward at your hips.
- Grab your toes and gently pull your torso down until you feel a strong stretch.
Strengthen Your Adductors
Move 1: Side-Lying Adduction
- Lie on your side, with your affected leg on the bottom.
- Bend your top knee and place your foot on the ground, just in front of your opposite knee.
- Keeping your toes pointed forward and knee straight, lift your bottom leg up as far as you comfortably can.
- Lower back down.
- Repeat this stretch on the other side.
Make this exercise more difficult by wrapping a cuff weight around your ankle.
Move 2: Isometric Ball Squeeze
- Lie on your back with your knees bent and feet resting on the floor.
- Place a small ball between your knees.
- Squeeze the ball between your knees, then relax.
This exercise can also be performed in a seated position.
Move 3: Hip Adduction on Fitness Ball
- Stand up straight. Bend your knee on the affected leg and rest it on top of a large fitness ball.
- Slowly roll the ball out to the side, then pull it back in using your adductor muscles.
- Place your hands on your hips for balance, if needed.
- Repeat this stretch on the other side.
Move 4: Sumo Squats
- Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart.
- Rotate your feet outward 45 degrees.
- Push your hips back, bend your knees, and squat down as if you are going to sit in a chair.
- Stop when your thighs are parallel to the ground, then stand back up.
Move 5: Side Lunges
- Stand with your toes pointed forward.
- Step your right leg out to the side until your feet are approximately double shoulder-width apart.
- Bend your right knee to 90 degrees, then push back up into a standing position.
- Return to the starting position.
- Step your left leg out to the side and repeat.
Move 6: Rotational Squats
- Place a resistance band around your thighs, just above your knees.
- Bend your knees slightly to put tension on the band.
- Rotate your trunk 90 degrees to the right. At the same time, rotate your right leg outward until your right foot is perpendicular to your left foot.
- While you are rotating, squat down.
- As you rotate back to the starting position, stand back up.
- Repeat on the opposite side.
The Takeaway
- While some degree of postexercise pain is normal, pain that limits your ability to walk could be a sign of serious injury.
- Access the severity of your pain for at-home treatment options, making sure to stretch and rest as needed.
- If you have symptoms of grade 3 pain, be sure to contact your healthcare provider for personalized treatment.
- Kiel J et al. Adductor Strain. StatPearls. June 12, 2023.
- Muscle Strain. Harvard Health Publishing. March 15, 2023.
- Lavian A. What Is Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness? Cedars Sinai. January 1, 2025.
- The Ideal Stretching Routine. Harvard Health Publishing. January 9, 2025.
- Smakal J et al. The Preventive Effect of Targeted Adductor Training on Groin Pain from Football Players. British Journal of Sports Medicine. November 2021.

Kara Andrew, RDN, LDN
Medical Reviewer
Kara Andrew, RDN, LDN, is the director of health promotion for Memorial Hospital in Carthage, Illinois. She is also licensed as an exercise physiologist and certified in lifestyle medicine by the American College of Lifestyle Medicine. Her experience includes corporate wellness, teaching for the American College of Sports Medicine, sports nutrition, weight management, integrative medicine, oncology support, and dialysis.
She earned her master's in exercise and nutrition science at Lipscomb University.
Andrew has served as a president and board member of the Nashville Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. She was recently elected a co-chair of the fitness and medicine group in the American College of Lifestyle Medicine.
